One wounded officer is still in hospital and another has been released.

The search for a heavily armed suspect who allegedly killed three RCMP officers and wounded two others in a Moncton, N.B. shooting rampage, ended early Friday morning when police confirmed suspect Justin Bourque was arrested at 12:10 a.m. local time.

A video taken by Wade Perry appears to appears to show the arrest of Bourque.

Global’s Natasha Pace was at Codiac RCMP headquarters in Moncton where an officer told her Bourque had been arrested.

Police said in a Thursday afternoon press conference that one officer remains in hospital and the other has been released, but did not disclose the identities of the officers, including the three killed.

But late Thursday, the National Post identified one of the officers fatally shot as Const. Dave Ross, a police services dog handler with the RCMP.

The newspaper quoted the sister-in-law of the man’s wife as saying he had a young son, with another child expected in September.

“These two little guys, or girl — we don’t know yet what it is going to be — will never know their dad,” Raquel Vander Ploeg told the newspaper. “This is the kind of nightmare that you never wake up from.”

Police officers take cover behind their vehicles in Moncton, New Brunswick, on Wednesday June 4, 2014.

AP Photo/Moncton Times & Transcript, Ron Ward via The Canadian Press

Cpl. Chantal Farrah emphasized residents in the north area of the city should remain inside and lock their doors Thursday afternoon, when the search for Bourque, a man in his twenties, continued into the evening. Farrah reiterated police instructions to avoid posting details about officer location on social media.

“We will continue to give you information when we do have; please keep following us,” said Farrah, referring to the RCMPNB Twitter account.

“The suspected shooter was last seen at approximately 8 a.m. on June 5 in the Gorge/Mountain Road area,” said superintendent Marlene Snowman in a Thursday statement.

More than a dozen officers surrounded an apartment complex earlier Thursday afternoon, sent a robot inside, and entered the building. Minutes later they removed the robot and exited without any sign of a suspect, and police said the clue that lead them to the location turned out to be false.

“This is not even close to being a typical day in New Brunswick, Moncton or even in Canada,” said New Brunswick RCMP Commanding Officer Roger Brown earlier Thursday morning.

“We are professionals. We will ensure the security of the public. We are going to do that,” said Codiac RCMP spokesperson Const. Damien Theriault, who later broke down in tears at a media briefing with the city’s mayor when he was asked how officers were balancing their grief and the difficult task of searching for the suspect.

The shootings in Moncton also brought back memories of an RCMP tragedy in Mayerthorpe, Alta., on March 3, 2005, when Constables Anthony Fitzgerald Orion Gordon, Lionide (Leo) Nicholas Johnston, Brock Warren Myrol and Peter Christopher Schiemann were shot and killed. The suspect was also found dead on the property.